CHAPTER LXII
The end came after four days during which Jennie was by his bedside
almost constantly. The nurse in charge welcomed her at first as a relief and
company, but the physician was inclined to object. Lester, however, was
stubborn. "This is my death," he said, with a touch of grim humor. "If I'm
dying I ought to be allowed to die in my own way."
Watson smiled at the man's unfaltering courage. He had never seen
anything like it before.
There were cards of sympathy, calls of inquiry, notices in the newspaper.
Robert saw an item in the Inquirer and decided to go to Chicago. Imogene
called with her husband, and they were admitted to Lester's room for a few
minutes after Jennie had gone to hers. Lester had little to say. The nurse
cautioned them that he was not to be talked to much. When they were gone
Lester said to Jennie, "Imogene has changed a good deal." He made no other
comment.
Mrs. Kane was on the Atlantic three days out from New York the afternoon
Lester died. He had been meditating whether anything more could be done
for Jennie, but he could not make up his mind about it. Certainly it was
useless to leave her more money. She did not want it. He had been
wondering where Letty was and how near her actual arrival might be when
he was seized with a tremendous paroxysm of pain. Before relief could be
administered in the shape of an anesthetic he was dead. It developed
afterward that it was not the intestinal trouble which killed him, but a lesion
of a major blood-vessel in the brain.
Jennie, who had been strongly wrought up by watching and worrying, was
beside herself with grief. He had been a part of her thought and feeling so
long that it seemed now as though a part of herself had died. She had loved
him as she had fancied she could never love any one, and he had always
shown that he cared for her—at least in some degree. She could not feel the
emotion that expresses itself in tears—only a dull ache, a numbness which
seemed to make her insensible to pain. He looked so strong—her Lester—
lying there still in death. His expression was unchanged—defiant,
determined, albeit peaceful. Word had come from Mrs. Kane that she would
arrive on the Wednesday following. It was decided to hold the body. Jennie
learned from Mr. Watson that it was to be transferred to Cincinnati, where
the Paces had a vault. Because of the arrival of various members of the
family, Jennie withdrew to her own home; she could do nothing more.
The final ceremonies presented a peculiar commentary on the anomalies of
existence. It was arranged with Mrs. Kane by wire that the body should be
transferred to Imogene's residence, and the funeral held from there. Robert,
who arrived the night Lester died; Berry Dodge, Imogene's husband; Mr.
Midgely, and three other citizens of prominence were selected as pall-
bearers. Louise and her husband came from Buffalo; Amy and her husband
from Cincinnati. The house was full to overflowing with citizens who either
sincerely wished or felt it expedient to call. Because of the fact that Lester
and his family were tentatively Catholic, a Catholic priest was called in and
the ritual of that Church was carried out. It was curious to see him lying in
the parlor of this alien residence, candles at his head and feet, burning
sepulchrally, a silver cross upon his breast, caressed by his waxen fingers.
He would have smiled if he could have seen himself, but the Kane family
was too conventional, too set in its convictions, to find anything strange in
this.
The Church made no objection, of course. The family was distinguished.
What more could be desired?
On Wednesday Mrs. Kane arrived. She was greatly distraught, for her love,
like Jennie's, was sincere. She left her room that night when all was silent
and leaned over the coffin, studying by the light of the burning candles
Lester's beloved features. Tears trickled down her cheeks, for she had been
happy with him. She caressed his cold cheeks and hands. "Poor, dear
Lester!" she whispered. "Poor, brave soul!" No one told her that he had sent
for Jennie. The Kane family did not know.
Meanwhile in the house on South Park Avenue sat a woman who was
enduring alone the pain, the anguish of an irreparable loss. Through all
these years the subtle hope had persisted, in spite of every circumstance,
that somehow life might bring him back to her. He had come, it is true—he
really had in death—but he had gone again. Where? Whither her mother,
whither Gerhardt, whither Vesta had gone? She could not hope to see him
again, for the papers had informed her of his removal to Mrs. Midgely's
residence, and of the fact that he was to be taken from Chicago to
Cincinnati for burial. The last ceremonies in Chicago were to be held in one
of the wealthy Roman Catholic churches of the South Side, St. Michael's, of
which the Midgelys were members.
Jennie felt deeply about this. She would have liked so much to have had
him buried in Chicago, where she could go to the grave occasionally, but
this was not to be. She was never a master of her fate. Others invariably
controlled. She thought of him as being taken from her finally by the
removal of the body to Cincinnati, as though distance made any difference.
She decided at last to veil herself heavily and attend the funeral at the
church. The paper had explained that the services would be at two in the
afternoon. Then at four the body would be taken to the depot, and
transferred to the train; the members of the family would accompany it to
Cincinnati. She thought of this as another opportunity. She might go to the
depot.
A little before the time for the funeral cortege to arrive at the church there
appeared at one of its subsidiary entrances a woman in black, heavily veiled,
who took a seat in an inconspicuous corner. She was a little nervous at first,
for, seeing that the church was dark and empty, she feared lest she had
mistaken the time and place; but after ten minutes of painful suspense a
bell in the church tower began to toll solemnly. Shortly thereafter an acolyte
in black gown and white surplice appeared and lighted groups of candles on
either side of the altar. A hushed stirring of feet in the choir-loft indicated
that the service was to be accompanied by music. Some loiterers, attracted
by the bell, some idle strangers, a few acquaintances and citizens not
directly invited appeared and took seats.
Jennie watched all this with wondering eyes. Never in her life had she been
inside a Catholic church. The gloom, the beauty of the windows, the
whiteness of the altar, the golden flames of the candles impressed her. She
was suffused with a sense of sorrow, loss, beauty, and mystery. Life in all its
vagueness and uncertainty seemed typified by this scene.
As the bell tolled there came from the sacristy a procession of altar-boys.
The smallest, an angelic youth of eleven, came first, bearing aloft a
magnificent silver cross. In the hands of each subsequent pair of servitors
was held a tall, lighted candle. The priest, in black cloth and lace, attended
by an acolyte on either hand, followed. The procession passed out the
entrance into the vestibule of the church, and was not seen again until the
choir began a mournful, responsive chant, the Latin supplication for mercy
and peace.
Then, at this sound the solemn procession made its reappearance. There
came the silver cross, the candles, the dark-faced priest, reading
dramatically to himself as he walked, and the body of Lester in a great black
coffin, with silver handles, carried by the pall-bearers, who kept an even
pace. Jennie stiffened perceptibly, her nerves responding as though to a
shock from an electric current. She did not know any of these men. She did
not know Robert. She had never seen Mr. Midgely. Of the long company of
notables who followed two by two she recognized only three, whom Lester
had pointed out to her in times past. Mrs. Kane she saw, of course, for she
was directly behind the coffin, leaning on the arm of a stranger; behind her
walked Mr. Watson, solemn, gracious. He gave a quick glance to either side,
evidently expecting to see her somewhere; but not finding her, he turned his
eyes gravely forward and walked on. Jennie looked with all her eyes, her
heart gripped by pain. She seemed so much a part of this solemn ritual, and
yet infinitely removed from it all.
The procession reached the altar rail, and the coffin was put down. A white
shroud bearing the insignia of suffering, a black cross, was put over it, and
the great candles were set beside it. There were the chanted invocations and
responses, the sprinkling of the coffin with holy water, the lighting and
swinging of the censer and then the mumbled responses of the auditors to
the Lord's Prayer and to its Catholic addition, the invocation to the Blessed
Virgin. Jennie was overawed and amazed, but no show of form colorful,
impression imperial, could take away the sting of death, the sense of infinite
loss. To Jennie the candles, the incense, the holy song were beautiful. They
touched the deep chord of melancholy in her, and made it vibrate through
the depths of her being. She was as a house filled with mournful melody and
the presence of death. She cried and cried. She could see, curiously, that
Mrs. Kane was sobbing convulsively also.
When it was all over the carriages were entered and the body was borne to
the station. All the guests and strangers departed, and finally, when all was
silent, she arose. Now she would go to the depot also, for she was hopeful of
seeing his body put on the train. They would have to bring it out on the
platform, just as they did in Vesta's case. She took a car, and a little later
she entered the waiting-room of the depot. She lingered about, first in the
concourse, where the great iron fence separated the passengers from the
tracks, and then in the waiting-room, hoping to discover the order of
proceedings. She finally observed the group of immediate relatives waiting—
Mrs. Kane, Robert, Mrs. Midgely, Louise, Amy, Imogene, and the others. She
actually succeeded in identifying most of them, though it was not knowledge
in this case, but pure instinct and intuition.
No one had noticed it in the stress of excitement, but it was Thanksgiving
Eve. Throughout the great railroad station there was a hum of anticipation,
that curious ebullition of fancy which springs from the thought of pleasures
to come. People were going away for the holiday. Carriages were at the
station entries. Announcers were calling in stentorian voices the destination
of each new train as the time of its departure drew near. Jennie heard with
a desperate ache the description of a route which she and Lester had taken
more than once, slowly and melodiously emphasized. "Detroit, Toledo,
Cleveland, Buffalo, and New York." There were cries of trains for "Fort
Wayne, Columbus, Pittsburg, Philadelphia, and points East," and then
finally for "Indianapolis, Louisville, Columbus, Cincinnati, and points
South." The hour had struck.
Several times Jennie had gone to the concourse between the waiting-room
and the tracks to see if through the iron grating which separated her from
her beloved she could get one last look at the coffin, or the great wooden box
which held it, before it was put on the train. Now she saw it coming. There
was a baggage porter pushing a truck into position near the place where the
baggage car would stop. On it was Lester, that last shadow of his substance,
incased in the honors of wood, and cloth, and silver. There was no thought
on the part of the porter of the agony of loss which was represented here. He
could not see how wealth and position in this hour were typified to her mind
as a great fence, a wall, which divided her eternally from her beloved. Had it
not always been so? Was not her life a patchwork of conditions made and
affected by these things which she saw—wealth and force—which had found
her unfit? She had evidently been born to yield, not seek. This panoply of
power had been paraded before her since childhood. What could she do now
but stare vaguely after it as it marched triumphantly by? Lester had been of
it. Him it respected. Of her it knew nothing. She looked through the grating,
and once more there came the cry of "Indianapolis, Louisville, Columbus,
Cincinnati, and points South." A long red train, brilliantly lighted, composed
of baggage cars, day coaches, a dining-car, set with white linen and silver,
and a half dozen comfortable Pullmans, rolled in and stopped. A great black
engine, puffing and glowing, had it all safely in tow.
As the baggage car drew near the waiting truck a train-hand in blue, looking
out of the car, called to some one within.
"Hey, Jack! Give us a hand here. There's a stiff outside!"
Jennie could not hear.
All she could see was the great box that was so soon to disappear. All she
could feel was that this train would start presently, and then it would all be
over. The gates opened, the passengers poured out. There were Robert, and
Amy, and Louise, and Midgely—all making for the Pullman cars in the rear.
They had said their farewells to their friends. No need to repeat them. A trio
of assistants "gave a hand" at getting the great wooden case into the car.
Jennie saw it disappear with an acute physical wrench at her heart.
There were many trunks to be put aboard, and then the door of the baggage
car half closed, but not before the warning bell of the engine sounded. There
was the insistent calling of "all aboard" from this quarter and that; then
slowly the great locomotive began to move. Its bell was ringing, its steam
hissing, its smoke-stack throwing aloft a great black plume of smoke that
fell back over the cars like a pall. The fireman, conscious of the heavy load
behind, flung open a flaming furnace door to throw in coal. Its light glowed
like a golden eye.
Jennie stood rigid, staring into the wonder of this picture, her face white,
her eyes wide, her hands unconsciously clasped, but one thought in her
mind—they were taking his body away. A leaden November sky was ahead,
almost dark. She looked, and looked until the last glimmer of the red lamp
on the receding sleeper disappeared in the maze of smoke and haze
overhanging the tracks of the far-stretching yard.
"Yes," said the voice of a passing stranger, gay with the anticipation of
coming pleasures. "We're going to have a great time down there. Remember
Annie? Uncle Jim is coming and Aunt Ella."
Jennie did not hear that or anything else of the chatter and bustle around
her. Before her was stretching a vista of lonely years down which she was
steadily gazing. Now what? She was not so old yet. There were those two
orphan children to raise. They would marry and leave after a while, and
then what? Days and days in endless reiteration, and then—?
THE END
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